Honduran woman vows to fight for asylum from Utah church

Published 07-10-2018

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) – A playground surrounded by a large shade tree stands right outside the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City, where Vicky Chavez and her two young daughters have been taking sanctuary for the past six months.

But Chavez never allows Yaretzi, 6, or Issabella, 11 months, to play there. They never step foot outside the church.

Chavez, 30, is afraid that U.S. immigration officials would round them up and send them back to Honduras, where she said she fears for their safety because of an abusive boyfriend. Her fears led her to seek asylum in the United States four years ago.

Despite immigration judges repeatedly denying her request, Chavez told reporters Monday night that she's determined to remain in the church and fight to stay in the Utah, where her parents and siblings live. In a long-shot effort, her lawyers are seeking relief from a federal appeals court.

"I shall keep fighting. I can help to be the voice of the other mothers that are seeking asylum from domestic abuse," Chavez said, surrounded by supporters holding signs. "We come to this country to feel safe and protected."

She said seeing other immigrant parents separated from their children at the border makes her even more reticent to return home and face a possible split from her daughters if she tried to seek U.S. asylum again.

"I can't imagine feeling the pain of being separated from one of my daughters," Chavez said in Spanish during an interview with The Associated Press last month. "Sleeping in a detention center is not easy at all. I lived it. And I lived it with my daughter, but not separated."

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement considers Chavez an immigration fugitive, spokesman Carl Rusnok said in an email Monday.

She entered the United States illegally in June 2014 and was ordered deported by a federal immigration judge in December 2016, Rusnok said. Chavez exhausted her appeals on Jan. 30, he said.

That night, Chavez had a plane ticket home to San Pedro Sula, Honduras. But instead she accepted an offer of sanctuary from the First Unitarian Church.

She and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. Ya

"I can't imagine feeling the pain of being separated from one of my daughters," Chavez said in Spanish during an interview with The Associated Press last month. "Sleeping in a detention center is not easy at all. I lived it. And I lived it with my daughter, but not separated."

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement considers Chavez an immigration fugitive, spokesman Carl Rusnok said in an email Monday.

She entered the United States illegally in June 2014 and was ordered deported by a federal immigration judge in December 2016, Rusnok said. Chavez exhausted her appeals on Jan. 30, he said.

That night, Chavez had a plane ticket home to San Pedro Sula, Honduras. But instead she accepted an offer of sanctuary from the First Unitarian Church.

She and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. Yaretzi, the 6-year-old, receives piano classes in the chapel, and they dance and run in an open room with wood floors.

Baby Issabella learned to walk in the church and celebrated her first birthday early there this month. Yaretzi gets tutored instead of attending school.

They are the first known immigrants to take sanctuary in Utah, according to local immigration advocates and the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. The practice has been common in states such as Arizona and California but unheard of in Utah, where Mormons account for about two-thirds of the population.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints takes a compassionate stance on immigration and recently said it was "deeply troubled" by the family separations at the border but d

She entered the United States illegally in June 2014 and was ordered deported by a federal immigration judge in December 2016, Rusnok said. Chavez exhausted her appeals on Jan. 30, he said.

That night, Chavez had a plane ticket home to San Pedro Sula, Honduras. But instead she accepted an offer of sanctuary from the First Unitarian Church.

She and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. Yaretzi, the 6-year-old, receives piano classes in the chapel, and they dance and run in an open room with wood floors.

Baby Issabella learned to walk in the church and celebrated her first birthday early there this month. Yaretzi gets tutored instead of attending school.

They are the first known immigrants to take sanctuary in Utah, according to local immigration advocates and the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. The practice has been common in states such as Arizona and California but unheard of in Utah, where Mormons account for about two-thirds of the population.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints takes a compassionate stance on immigration and recently said it was "deeply troubled" by the family separations at the border but doesn't offer sanctuary to immigrants.

The Rev. Tom Goldsmith of the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City said his congregation of about 300 families voted a decade ago to welcome a sanctuary case.

When a local immigrant support group presented Chavez's case, the congregation decided to help, he said. President Donald Trump's administration strengthened their commitment, he said.

"It's too easy to just conduct business as usual as a group of predominantly white, privileged parishioners," Goldsmith said. "There is a deep calling to widen the love and commitment to social justice. To not only show up at demonstrations or protests or marches but to actually in a very tangible form prove that we really mean what we say."

Some 200 church members and other volunteers help ensure the Chavez family is fed, educated, supported and protected. Church members tutor Yaretzi. They shop for groceries so the family has food they like.

And they take turns guarding the church's one unlocked door around the clock, Goldsmith said. Though immigration authorities generally don't enter churches, the church isn't taking any chances, he said.

ICE agents must have prior approval from a supervisor to take action in churches because they are considered "sensitive locations," which also include schools and hospitals, Rusnok said.

Chavez said she wants the chance to stay in the country that has been home to her parents and siblings for decades and where she and her children enjoy a peaceful life.

She and her supporters know she faces a steep hurdle after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who oversees immigration courts, declared that domestic and gang violence are generally not sufficient grounds for asylum. Still, she says she has no choice.

"I don't have family in Honduras. I don't have a place to take my girls," Chavez said. "I came because I'm running away from domestic violence. We were receiving death threats. ... I'm scared to return to Honduras. Not just for me, but for my girls."

___

See AP's complete coverage of the immigration debate: https://apnews.com/tag/Immigration

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In this May 18, 2018 photo, Vicky Chavez plays with her daughter Issabella within the walls of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who came to the U.S. four years ago seeking asylum from an abusive boyfriend says she'll continue taking sanctuary in a Salt Lake City Unitarian church where she's been for the past six months with her two young daughters despite being ordered to leave and exhausting her appeals. Chavez says seeing fellow Central Americans separated from their children at the U.S.-Mexico border makes her intent on trying to fight to stay in the United States. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez walks with her daughter Issabella in the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who came to the U.S. four years ago seeking asylum from an abusive boyfriend says she'll continue taking sanctuary in a Salt Lake City Unitarian church where she's been for the past six months with her two young daughters despite being ordered to leave and exhausting her appeals. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez plays with her daughter Issabella in the chapel of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Issabella learned to walk in the church and celebrated an early first birthday there. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez comforts her daughter Issabella in the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez says seeing fellow Central Americans separated from their children at the U.S.-Mexico border makes her intent on trying to fight to stay in the United States. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez's daughter Yaretzi, 6, plays within the walls of the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City. The family never steps outside the church out of fear that U.S. immigration officials will send them back to Honduras. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez's daughter Yaretzi, 6, plays within the walls of the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City. Yaretzi receives piano classes in the chapel and they dance and run in an open room with wood floors. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez studies english in her room within the walls of the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who came to the U.S. four years ago seeking asylum from an abusive boyfriend says she'll continue taking sanctuary in a Salt Lake City Unitarian church where she's been for the past six months with her two young daughters despite being ordered to leave and exhausting her appeals. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez plays with her daughter Issabella in their room within the walls of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Vicky Chavez and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez plays with her daughter Issabella in their room within the walls of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Vicky Chavez and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez attends to her daughter's Yaretzi, left, and Issabella within the walls of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Vicky Chavez and her daughters sleep in a converted Sunday school room and spend most of their time in another room with a TV, easel and other games. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez watches her daughter Yaretzi play on the piano in the chapel of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Yaretzi receives piano classes in the chapel and they dance and run in an open room with wood floors. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 31, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez sits in the chapel in the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who came to the U.S. four years ago seeking asylum from an abusive boyfriend says she'll continue taking sanctuary in a Salt Lake City Unitarian church where she's been for the past six months with her two young daughters despite being ordered to leave and exhausting her appeals. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo, Vicky receives a hugs from a supporter following a news conference, at the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who has been taking sanctuary with her two daughters in a First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City for the past six months is vowing to fight for her asylum case and seek relief from a federal appeals court. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez, center, speaks during a news conference while supporters look on at the First Unitarian church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who has been taking sanctuary with her two daughters in a First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City for the past six months is vowing to fight for her asylum case and seek relief from a federal appeals court. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez, lower left, stands with supporters during a news conference at the First Unitarian church in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who has been taking sanctuary with her two daughters in a First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City for the past six months is vowing to fight for her asylum case and seek relief from a federal appeals court. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez looks on during a news conference at the First Unitarian church, in Salt Lake City. Chavez, a Honduran woman who has been taking sanctuary with her two daughters in a First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City for the past six months is vowing to fight for her asylum case and seek relief from a federal appeals court. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press

In this May 18, 2018, photo, Vicky Chavez plays with her daughter Issabella within the walls of the First Unitarian Church, in Salt Lake City. Vicky Chavez said Monday, July 9, at a news conference that she hopes to be a voice for other women who are victims of domestic violence. She fled San Pedro Sula, Honduras, in fear of an abusive boyfriend four years ago. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
- The Associated Press